feature image

Maintaining international links in the absence of international travel

Dr Dmitri Efimkin introducing speakers in the trans-Pacific series (FLEET/Monash)

US–Australian transpacific condensed-matter talks

The temporary halt in international visits that traditionally spark and fuel research collaborations in 2020 pushed FLEET to find new ways to connect.

Some positives have surfaced amid the negative impacts of Covid-19 travel bans on science collaboration, including the expansion in videoconferencing allowing researchers from geographically isolated regions to connect.

Together with Centre partners at the Joint Quantum Institute (University of Maryland) and Monash University, FLEET inaugurated and hosted a new transpacific colloquium series to present novel development in condensed-matter and cold-atom physics.

To maintain and strengthen connections between physics communities in Australia and North America, the series hosted seven colloquia with speakers from Cornell, Stanford and Rutgers universities (USA), UNSW and Monash (Australia) and the University of Waterloo (Canada).

The colloquia covered topics from all FLEET research themes, including:

The virtual series was not without challenges as the team navigated multiple time zones and daylight saving periods, all the while learning and mastering the art of Zoom video conferencing. The seven colloquia in 2020 attracted more than 180 Centre members and another 150 external participants.

The series represents one of 2020’s ‘silver linings’: an improvement in the way the Centre operates that we intend to maintain going forward. Regardless of travel policies in 2021, the US–Australia Transpacific Colloquium series will continue.

Six additional speakers, from Caltech, Ohio State, McGill, Harvard and Columbia universities, are already lined up for the first half of the new year.

See the complete list of speakers, and catch up with recordings of past talks, at FLEET.org.au/trans-pacific

—this is an extract from the 2020 FLEET annual report [read the full report online]